AlterNet / By Ronnie Cummins, Dave Murphy

Exposed: How Whole Foods and the Biggest Organic Foods Distributor Are Screwing 
Workers

United Natural Foods Incorporated, the largest wholesale distributor of organic 
and “natural” foods in the U.S., is currently under investigation for 45 
violations of federal labor law.
January 31, 2013  |  
 
 
 
This article was published in partnership with GlobalPossibilities.org. 

 
“The union is like having herpes. It doesn't kill you, but it's unpleasant and 
inconvenient, and it stops a lot of people from becoming your lover." -- John 
Mackey, CEO of Whole Foods Market

CEO John Mackey has done a brilliant job of creating the illusion that his 
empire is all about abundance, bounty and the good life. But there’s nothing 
bountiful or good about the way the second-largest non-unionized food retailer 
exploits workers.

United Natural Foods Incorporated (UNFI), the largest multi-billion dollar 
wholesale distributor of organic and “natural” foods in the U.S., is currently 
under investigation for 45 violations of federal labor law, including 
physically threatening immigrant workers in California who were trying to form 
a union.

The company recently fired its underpaid and overworked unionized workers at 
its Auburn, Wash., distribution center for going on strike, and illegally hired 
non-union replacement workers.

What happens when companies like WFM and UNFI, which have carefully cultivated 
their public progressive images, start acting like Walmart? When union-busting 
and labor exploitation are accepted as “business-as-usual” in the green 
economy, it makes us all look bad. It discredits organics and Fair Trade by 
creating the impression that consumers don’t really care how their healthy 
organic food was produced. That the entire industry cares only about profits. 
Ethics and workers be damned.

When flagship organic companies take a Walmart approach to workers’ rights, it 
sends negative and conflicting signals to core organic consumers, making it 
look like leaders in the organic community are concerned about the plight of 
endangered species and Third World coffee growers or cacao producers, but 
oblivious to the economic pain and stresses of working class Americans or 
hardworking immigrants who plant and harvest our organic fruits and vegetables 
and then pack and deliver them to our neighborhood co-ops and natural food 
markets.

Isn’t it time we ask the same of WFM and UNFI that we demand of ourselves: that 
they walk their talk, prioritize organic food and products, practice Fair Trade 
and social justice, and wake up to the fact that "business as usual" is a 
bitter recipe for injustice?

The demand for organic and fairly traded food, apparel and body care products 
has grown exponentially over the past two decades. Millions of consumers are 
demanding products that not only are organic and healthy, but also embody Fair 
Trade principles, whereby the workers involved in producing these products are 
treated fairly and paid equitably.

Under the USDA’s National Organic Program (NOP), organic products are certified 
by third-party certifiers and regulated under federal law. But no such federal 
standards exist for Fair Trade labor practices, including the right of workers, 
especially in large businesses, to form trade unions and engage in collective 
bargaining with their employers.  As a consequence many consumers look for the 
“Fair Trade” label on imported goods, but pay little attention to the domestic 
supply chain.  Here in the U.S., most consumers naively believe that organics 
and Fair Trade practices go hand in hand. They are surprised to learn that most 
family farmers and farm workers, as well as many supply chain workers, struggle 
to make a living. But the truth is, labor exploitation is rampant in the 
fields, factories and warehouses where organic products are grown, processed 
and housed. And this is especially true when small, alternative businesses are 
bought out by corporate investors.

WFM is one of the biggest offenders in the U.S. The company’s Whole Trade 
Guarantee, through a third-party verified program, supposedly ensures that 
producers and laborers in developing countries get an equitable price for their 
goods in a safe and healthy working environment. But here in the U.S., WFM. the 
second largest union-free food retailer behind Walmart,  has taken the position 
that unions are not valid. The company even gives its workers a pamphlet titled 
"Beyond Unions." In the company’s 27-year history, only one of its stores, in 
Madison, Wis., successfully unionized. The chain has also fended off unionizing 
attempts in Berkeley, Calif.; St. Paul, Minn.; and Falls Church, Va.

As for UNFI, the company’s recent record on workers’ rights is abysmal. The 
National Labor Relations Board investigation includes allegations that UNFI 
engaged in worker surveillance, intimidation and retaliation; that it refused 
to bargain in good faith; and that it illegally reassigned bargaining unit 
work. UNFI workers and drivers at UNFI’s Auburn, Wash., distribution center 
went on strike for better pay and better working conditions Dec. 10, after 
rejecting UNFI’s latest contract offer. In retaliation UNFI fired them and 
illegally hired non-union replacement workers.

WFM and UNFI like to brag about how their workers are part of their “family,” 
and how well management treats them. But what about the thousands of 
non-unionized and exploited farm workers in California, Texas, Florida, Mexico, 
Latin America and Asia who supply many of their premium-priced products? What 
about the immigrant feedlot workers across the country? What about the truck 
drivers, food processing workers and warehouse staff who are threatened and 
intimidated whenever they try to organize themselves for collective bargaining? 
Are we all one family?

It’s time for WFM and UNFI to publicly acknowledge that Fair Trade principles 
and practices need to be implemented as part of their entire US/North 
American/global supply chain for food and organic and natural products, not 
just for the minority of products produced overseas and certified as Fair 
Trade. And of course, supporting domestic Fair Trade means that WFM and UNFI 
must stop their union busting and start recognizing the rights of workers, 
especially workers in large for-profit corporations, to freely organize 
themselves into unions for collective bargaining.

Until they do, as conscientious consumers we have to pressure UNFI and its 
largest customer, WFM. In response to UNFI’s actions in Washington State, the 
Organic Consumers Association (OCA) has called for a boycott of UNFI’s brand 
name products, Woodstock Foods and Blue Marble, until the company rehires its 
fired workers in Auburn, stops harassing and intimidating workers and drivers 
who want to form a union, and sits down to sign a fair contract.  We’re also 
asking organic food stores to look for alternative wholesalers to supply their 
stores, as a number of coops in Seattle and Olympia Washington, have already 
begun to do.  

In addition to boycotting UNFI’s Woodstock Foods and Blue Marble products, we 
encourage consumers to:

Sign the online petition in support of the striking workers at UNFI.
Call UNFI Manager Hank Heatherly at (253) 333-6769. Tell him to rehire the 
fired workers and return to the bargaining table immediately.
If you live in Washington State, and are willing to join in informational 
leafleting at Whole Foods Markets, sign up here. 
Ronnie Cummins is founder and director of the Organic Consumers Association. 
Cummins is author of numerous articles and books, including "Genetically 
Engineered Food: A Self-Defense Guide for Consumers" (Second Revised Edition 
Marlowe & Company 2004).
 
Dave Murphy is the founder and executive director of Food Democracy Now!, a 
grassroots movement of more than 350,000 American farmers and citizens 
dedicated to creating a more sustainable future. You can follow him at 
@food_democracy

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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